An efficient approach for the synthesis of pyrazoline/pyrazole-tethered pyridinyl methanones is described via a one-pot, stepwise, sequential methodology using chalcones and pyridine-4-carbohydrazide as substrates through a Michael addition followed by cyclization. The reaction proceeds via a catalyst-, solvent-, work-up-, and column-chromatography-free method under melt conditions to provide the pyrazolines in short reaction times with high atom efficiency.
A new cloud vapor zone (CVZ)-based headspace solid-phase microextraction (HS-SPME) technique has been demonstrated with the capability of heating the sample matrix and simultaneously cooling the sampling zone. A bi-temperature-controlled (BTC) system, allowing 10 mL of test sample heating and headspace external-cooling, was employed for the CVZ formation around the SPME-fiber sampling area. In the CVZ procedure, the heated headspace vapor undergoes a sudden cooling near the SPME to form a dense cloud of analyte-water vapor, which is helpful for adsorption or absorption of the analyte. The device was evaluated for the quantitative analysis of aqueous chlorothalonil. Parameters influencing sampling efficiency, e.g., SPME fiber coating, SPME sampling temperature and time, solution modifier, addition of salt, sample pH, and temperature, were investigated and optimized thoroughly. The proposed BTC-HS-SPME method afforded a best extraction efficiency of above 94% accuracy (less than 4.1% RSD, n=7) by using the PDMS fiber to collect chlorothalonil in the headspace at 5 degrees C under the optimized condition, i.e., heating sample solution (added as 10% ethylene glycol and 30% NaCl, at pH 7.0) at 130 degrees C for 15 min. The detection was linear from 0.01 to 80 microg L-1 with a regression coefficient of 0.9998 and had a detection limit of 3.0 ng L-1 based on S/N=3. Practical application was demonstrated by analyzing chlorothalonil in farm water samples with promising results and recoveries. The approach provided a very simple, fast, sensitive, and solvent-free procedure to collect analytes from aqueous solution. The approach can provide a new platform for other sensitive HS-SPME assays.
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